Graduate jobs fall sharply as hiring hits lowest level in 13 years

-

Many candidates who finished university in recent years are still searching for their first permanent role and are now competing directly with the latest group of graduates and those applying in their final year. The result is a crowded market where even strong academic results are no longer enough to secure a place.

Applications are rising quickly while opportunities contract, leaving growing numbers of graduates taking temporary work, internships or roles outside their chosen field as they try to gain a foothold.

New data from High Fliers, a market research company that tracks graduate recruitment among the UK’s largest organisations, shows that hiring by leading employers has dropped by almost a quarter over the past three years, reaching its lowest level since 2013.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Record competition as applications surge

The squeeze is being driven by a sharp increase in applications at the same time as intake falls. High Fliers reported that graduate job applications have doubled since 2023, with several years of candidates now chasing the same roles.

Martin Birchall, managing director of High Fliers Research, said the backlog of applicants had created a difficult cycle for both candidates and recruiters, explaining that three years of reduced hiring had led to a build-up of jobseekers. “We now have three years of graduates looking for jobs, so the number of applications per vacancy goes up and it becomes a really tricky spiral,” he said.

The pressure is reflected in public sector recruitment. The Civil Service Fast Stream, an acceleration programme, received 72,691 applications in 2025, but only 754 candidates were recommended for appointment, leaving the success rate at around 1 percent.

In some sectors, graduates are also moving into roles that would previously have been filled by students. Birchall said hospitality employers were increasingly recruiting graduates into permanent roles after they struggled to secure positions elsewhere.

Salaries stall as hiring slows

Pay is no longer rising in line with previous years. High Fliers said graduate starting salaries are expected to remain at a median of £35,000 in 2026, with no increase forecast for the first time since 2022.

With more candidates competing for each role, organisations face less pressure to raise starting pay or offer additional incentives. But this dynamic can create longer-term challenges if new recruits accept roles that are not well suited to them.

Birchall said some organisations were already seeing higher turnover among graduate hires, as candidates moved on quickly after securing their first role. “People are accepting any job they’re offered, but then it turns out it isn’t the one they wanted or it isn’t a good fit for them,” he said.

Recruitment teams are also handling significantly higher volumes of applications. Azets, an accountancy and business advisory group, received more than 10,500 applications for just over 200 graduate roles this year.

Peter Gallanagh, chief executive for the UK and Ireland at Azets, said the company had adjusted its entry requirements to avoid missing strong candidates, explaining that academic results alone were no longer the sole indicator of potential. “While a good educational background is important, we’ve lowered our entry requirements to a 2:2 to avoid missing out on great candidates who may not have got the honours they wanted,” he was quoted in The Times as saying.

He added that broader experience was becoming more important in selection decisions. “When we recruit graduates, we look for people whose past experiences have shaped their character and outlook. That can be through part-time work in retail, hospitality or other industries, volunteering in the community, competing in sport or taking on leadership roles in student life, as these experiences build grit, teamwork, responsibility and problem-solving and collaboration skills.”

Technology and policy may reshape entry routes

The current downturn may not be the only pressure facing graduate recruitment. Birchall said advances in artificial intelligence could reduce demand for entry-level roles in the coming years if organisations were able to increase productivity with smaller teams. “What AI may do is reduce the need for that graduate expansion because each individual becomes much more productive,” he said.

Government policy is also focusing on alternative routes into work. A Cabinet Office spokesman said investment was being directed towards apprenticeships and training to support young people into employment, stating: “We’re determined to go further to support young people into work and gain the skills they need to succeed. That’s why we’re investing £1.5 billion to get hundreds of thousands of young people earning or learning, including through an expansion of apprenticeships and training.”

With vacancies expected to fall again this year, competition for graduate roles is unlikely to ease in the short term. For those entering the labour market, the path into stable employment is becoming longer, less predictable and increasingly shaped by factors beyond academic performance alone.

William Furney is a Managing Editor at Black and White Trading Ltd based in Kingston upon Hull, UK. He is a prolific author and contributor at Workplace Wellbeing Professional, with over 127 published posts covering HR, employee engagement, and workplace wellbeing topics. His writing focuses on contemporary employment issues including pension schemes, employee health, financial struggles affecting workers, and broader workplace trends.

Latest news

Amy Speake: The succession crisis hiding in plain sight – why April 6th is HR’s wake-up call

From 6th April, changes to Business Property Relief has removed or reduced inheritance tax protections on certain business assets.

Waitrose case exposes legal risks for employers when staff confront shoplifters

Retail safety policies face scrutiny after worker dismissal sparks debate over employer response to shoplifting.

State pension age begins rise to 67 as payments increase

Workers will retire later as pension eligibility changes take effect alongside higher payments and growing workforce pressures.

Employers face compliance test as employment rights reforms take effect

New workplace rules come into force across the UK, extending protections from the start of employment and increasing pressure on organisations.
- Advertisement -

HR fine risk rises as new enforcement agency launches amid low awareness

New workplace regulator the Fair Work Agency begins enforcement as firms warned over compliance gaps and legal risks.

Maxine Carrington on who AI really serves at work

“Are we working for AI at this point or is AI working for us?”

Must read

These five film and TV character types could help you build a better team

Which film characters do your recruits admire?  Getting to know some of an employees pop culture heroes can be useful in understanding their own personalities, according to Alexandre Pachulski of Talentsoft.

Rita Trehan: How can HR professionals deal with Boris Johnson’s scandals in the workplace?

Could HR deal with Boris Johnson in the workplace?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you